Post on 13-Apr-2017
Music of the 20th CenturyPrimitivistic Music
Music of the 20th CenturyPrimitivistic MusicOverviewRussian Dance from PetrouchkaBela BartokDuet for Pipes
PrimitivismPrimitivistic music is tonal through the asserting of one note as more important than the others. New sounds are synthesized or combining the various components into new whole from old ones by juxtaposing or putting side by side the two simple events to create a more complex new event.
PrimitivismExoticismthrough the use of materials from other cultureshas links to:
Nationalismthrough the use of materials indigenous to specific countriesPrimitivismhas links to:
through the use of materials from European ethnic groupsEthnicism Primitivismhas links to:
through the use of materials from European ethnic groupsEthnicism Primitivismhas links to:
BELA BARTOK(18811945)
Russian Dance from Petrouchka(Excerpt) Igor Stravinsky
Bela Bartok
Bela Viktor Janos BartokPlace of Birth: Nagyszentmiklos, Hungary (now Romania)Date of Birth: March 25, 1881,He entered at Budapest Royal Academy of Music in 1899.Inspired by Richard Strausss Also Sprach Zarathustra to write his first nationalistic poem, Kossuth in 1903.
Bela Bartok
Bela Viktor Janos BartokPlace of Birth: Nagyszentmiklos, Hungary (now Romania)Date of Birth: March 25, 1881,He entered at Budapest Royal Academy of Music in 1899.Inspired by Richard Strausss Also Sprach Zarathustra to write his first nationalistic poem, Kossuth in 1903.
Bela Bartok
Bela Viktor Janos BartokPlace of Birth: Nagyszentmiklos, Hungary (now Romania)Date of Birth: March 25, 1881,He entered at Budapest Royal Academy of Music in 1899.Inspired by Richard Strausss Also Sprach Zarathustra to write his first nationalistic poem, Kossuth in 1903.
12
Bela Bartok
In 1906, with his fellow composer Kodaly, Bartok published his first collection of 20 Hungarian folk songs.
Bela Bartok
As a neo-classicist, primitivist, and nationalist composer, Bartok used Hungarian folk themes and rhythms. He also utilized changing meters and strong syncopations. He admired the musical styles of Liszt, Strauss, Debussy, and Stravinsky.
Bela Bartok
As a neo-classicist, primitivist, and nationalist composer, Bartok used Hungarian folk themes and rhythms. He also utilized changing meters and strong syncopations. He admired the musical styles of Liszt, Strauss, Debussy, and Stravinsky.Franz Liszt
Bela Bartok
As a neo-classicist, primitivist, and nationalist composer, Bartok used Hungarian folk themes and rhythms. He also utilized changing meters and strong syncopations. He admired the musical styles of Liszt, Strauss, Debussy, and Stravinsky.Strauss
Bela Bartok
As a neo-classicist, primitivist, and nationalist composer, Bartok used Hungarian folk themes and rhythms. He also utilized changing meters and strong syncopations. He admired the musical styles of Liszt, Strauss, Debussy, and Stravinsky.Claude Debussy
Bela Bartok
As a neo-classicist, primitivist, and nationalist composer, Bartok used Hungarian folk themes and rhythms. He also utilized changing meters and strong syncopations. He admired the musical styles of Liszt, Strauss, Debussy, and Stravinsky.Igor Stravinsky
Bela BartokBartok is most famous for his Six String Quartets (19081938). It represents the greatest achievement of his creative life, spanning a full 30 years for their completion.
Bela BartokThe Concerto for Orchestra (1943), features the exceptional talents of its various soloists in an intricately constructed piece. The short and popular Allegro Barbaro (1911) for solo piano is punctuated with swirling rhythms and percussive chords. Mikrokosmos (19261939), a set of six books, introduced and familiarized the piano student with contemporary harmony and rhythm.
Bela Bartokmore or less 695 musical compositionsconcertiorchestral musicpiano musicinstrumental musicdramatic musicchoral musicsongs
Bela BartokBartok to migrate to the United States, where he died on September 26, 1945 in New York City, USA.
Duet for Pipes(Excerpt) Bela Bartok
Music of the 20th CenturyPrimitivistic MusicGroup 2 Members:
John Adrian AdiazMark Edward OrpiaAlyssa CasimiroArlene CorpuzOverviewRussian Dance from PetrouchkaBela BartokDuet for Pipes
null168707.42null57572.87